Giant ragweed is one of the most problematic weeds in midwestern annual cropping systems (Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Regnier, Schmoll and Webb2001; Kruger et al. Reference Kruger, Johnson, Weller, Owen, Shaw, Wilcut, Jordan, Wilson, Bernards and Young2009; Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016). Rapid biomass accumulation, adaptation to a range of successional habitats, and prolonged emergence periods contribute to the success of giant ragweed as an agricultural weed (Bassett and Crompton Reference Bassett and Crompton1982; Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Regnier, Schmoll and Harrison2007; Schutte et al. Reference Schutte, Regnier and Harrison2012). Further contributing to the competitive nature of giant ragweed is its evolved resistance to herbicides. Herbicide-resistant giant ragweed is found in the United States and Canada, with 20 confirmed biotypes in the United States and two in Canada (Heap Reference Heap2016). Of these biotypes, 13 are resistant to glyphosate, five are resistant to acetolactate synthase (ALS) inhibitors, and four show multiple resistance to both herbicides. Although the use of ALS inhibitors decreased following the introduction of glyphosate-resistant cropping systems (National Research Council 2010), an increase in glyphosate resistance may actually be an incentive to growers to increase the use of ALS inhibitors. Cloransulam is particularly effective among ALS inhibitors for giant ragweed management in soybean and is an important option for the management of glyphosate-resistant giant ragweed (Davis et al. Reference Davis, Jensen, Nice, Renz and Smith2014; Vink et al. Reference Vink, Soltani, Robinson, Tardif, Lawton and Sikkema2012).
Resistance to ALS inhibitors is not unique to giant ragweed; more weed species (158) are resistant to ALS inhibitors than any other herbicide group worldwide (Heap Reference Heap2016). This herbicide group targets the ALS enzyme, thus preventing synthesis of branched-chain amino acids and ultimately starving the plant (Saari et al. Reference Saari, Cotterman and Thill1994). In most cases, resistance to ALS inhibitors has been attributed to reduced sensitivity of the target ALS enzyme (Tranel and Wright 2002). To date, there are few cases of metabolic-conferred resistance to ALS inhibitors (Corbett and Tardif 2006). Several target-site mutations have been identified that confer resistance to at least one ALS-inhibiting herbicide family; however, the level of resistance conferred is variable among families (Heap Reference Heap2016). The most common substitutions include those replacing proline at the 197 position and a tryptophan-to-leucine substitution at the 574 amino acid position (W574L) (Tranel et al. Reference Tranel, Wright and Heap2015). The W574L substitution relative to an Arabidopsis thaliana reference is the only known mutation to confer resistance to ALS inhibitors in giant ragweed (Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002).
Mutations conferring herbicide resistance often involve mutations in major metabolic pathways, and therefore it is hypothesized that the mutation may have a detrimental effect on fitness. Holt and Thill (Reference Holt and Thill1994) concluded that alterations of the ALS enzyme affect plant growth and development but these changes may or may not result in a measurable difference in plant fitness. Tardif et al. (Reference Tardif, Rajcan and Costea2006) found that the W574L substitution in Powell amaranth (Amaranthus powellii S. Wats.) was associated with reduced aboveground biomass and seed production; however, the same mutation in annual bluegrass (Poa annua L.) was associated with greater inflorescence and seed production but did not affect relative growth rate compared with an S biotype (Cross et al. Reference Cross, McCarty, McElroy, Tharavil and Bridges2015). The effect of target-site alterations on plant fitness is variable depending on the weed species and the specific alteration and therefore should not be generalized (Vila-Aiub et al. Reference Vila-Aiub, Neve and Powles2009).
We identified a giant ragweed population in south–central Wisconsin (Columbia County) that showed putative resistance to cloransulam. The population was found in a long-term corn–soybean rotation with a history of cloransulam and flumetsulam use in soybean and flumetsulam use in corn. Our objectives were to (1) quantify the response of this putative-resistant giant ragweed population to cloransulam, (2) determine the mechanism of resistance, and (3) determine the potential effects of the resistance trait(s) on competitive ability, fecundity, and seed viability.
Materials and Methods
Seed Sources
Seeds were collected from several putative-resistant plants (R accession) and pooled in fall 2008 from the University of Wisconsin–Madison (UW-Madison) Arlington Agricultural Research Station in Colombia County, WI (43°18′9.47″N, 89°20′43.32″W). Seeds were also collected from putative-sensitive plants (S accession) and pooled from treatments in which ALS-inhibiting herbicides had not been applied in the previous 10 yr. Seed samples were cleaned in an air-column separator and stored at −20 C until conditioning for experiments. Prior to use in experiments, seeds were stratified in cold, wet sand at 4 to 5 C for 8 to 12 wk to break dormancy (Westhoven et al. 2008). Following stratification, embryos were isolated from the achene and involucre following the methods of Schutte et al. (Reference Schutte, Regnier and Harrison2012) to improve germination rates. For competitive growth and fecundity experiments, seed number was increased for both R and S accessions by growing groups of plants of either accession to maturity in isolated greenhouses. Seeds were harvested, stored, and conditioned as described above.
Whole-Plant Dose Response
Whole-plant cloransulam dose–response experiments were conducted at the UW-Madison greenhouses to quantify the resistance level of the R accession relative to the S accession. Isolated embryos were planted 2 cm deep in potting medium (Metro Mix 366 P, Scott-Sierra Horticultural Products, Marysville, OH) in 48-cell plastic trays, with one embryo planted per cell. When the first true leaves emerged, seedlings were transplanted into potting medium (as described above) in 10 cm diameter by 13 cm tall plastic pots. Plants were grown under a12.5 h light and 11.5 h dark cycle at 30 and 25 C, respectively. The light cycle was supplemented with artificial light (1000 W high-pressure sodium, P. L. Light System, Beamsville, ON, Canada). Plants were watered daily and fertilized (380 to 400 ppm N; Peter’s Professional Water Soluble Fertilizer, Dublin, OH) once weekly. All pots containing plants were rerandomized twice weekly to minimize the effects of microenvironmental variation within the greenhouse.
At the four- to six-node stage (approximately 15 cm tall plants), R plants were treated with cloransulam (FirstRate® 84DF, Dow AgroSciences, Indianapolis, IN) at 0 (nontreated check), 0.1765, 1.765, 17.65, 176.5, and 1,765 g ai ha−1. Sensitive plants were treated with cloransulam at 0, 0.1765, 0.8825, 1.765, 17.65, and 176.5 g ai ha−1. All treatments included 0.25% (v/v) nonionic surfactant (Activator 90, Loveland Products, Loveland, CO) and 2.24 kg ha−1 ammonium sulfate (AMS, Cornbelt® Premium AMS, Van Diest Supply, Webster City, IA). Treatments were applied in a stationary pot sprayer equipped with an even flat-fan spray nozzle (TeeJet 8002E, Spraying Systems, Wheaton, IL) calibrated to deliver 187 L ha−1 spray solution at the level of the plant canopy. After treatment, plants were returned to the greenhouse and maintained in the environmental conditions described above. The experimental design was a completely randomized design with eight replications, and the experiment was repeated four times. The experimental unit was one plant. Shoot mass was harvested 28 d after treatment, dried at 60 C until constant mass was achieved, and weighed.
Shoot dry mass data were subjected to nonlinear regression using the best-fit model procedure following the methods of Price et al. (2012) and Knezevic et al. (2007). Regression parameters for the S accessions were estimated using a four-parameter log-logistic equation:
where b is the relative slope of the curve at e (the inflection point), c is the lower asymptote, and d is the upper asymptote (Knezevic et al. 2007). For symmetric functions, e is equal to the ED50 value, the effective dose of herbicide that decreases shoot biomass by 50% relative to nontreated plants. The dose–response model was estimated using the ‘drc’ package (Ritz and Streibig 2005) using R Statistical Language Software (R Development Core Team 2014; R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Wien, Austria). A lack-of-fit F-test was performed to test similarity of curves (Ritz et al. 2006). Residuals were checked for normality and homogeneity of variance. Responses (aboveground dry shoot mass plant−1) at discrete doses were tested for differences among the R and S accessions using ANOVA (P≤0.05).
In Vivo ALS Activity
Plants were grown under greenhouse conditions as described above. The response of in vivo ALS activity to cloransulam in R and S plants was measured using modified methods of Rainbolt et al. (2005). A stock incubation solution was prepared with 500 µM 1,1-cyclopropanedicarboxylic acid, 10% (v/v) Murashige & Skoog salt media in de-ionized H2O, 10 mM KH2PO4, and 5.0 g L−1 l-alanine. An aliquot of the stock incubation solution was used to prepare treatment doses of 10−6, 10−5, 10−4, 10−3, 10−2, 0.1, and 1 µM cloransulam. Each treatment dose (100 µl) was pipetted into a well of a 96-well plate. Fourteen leaf disks were removed from the youngest fully emerged leaf of each plant (four to seven nodes) using a 5 mm diameter cork borer. Seven leaf disks were used to test each plant at each of the seven cloransulam doses, and seven leaf disks were used as a paired nontreated control. Each treatment was replicated twice per experiment. A single leaf disk was placed in each of the assay wells, with the exception of a single row per plant containing only incubation solution, which was used as an adjustment factor accounting for the absorbance values of the reagents used. No leaf disks were added to wells in this row. Plates were incubated under fluorescent light (150 µmol photons m−2 s−1) for 24 h at 20 C. After incubation, plates were frozen at −20 C overnight and thawed at 60 C for 15 min. Twenty-five µl of H2SO4 was added to each well, and the plate was incubated at 60 C for 20 min, after which 150 µl of a solution containing 2.5 g L−1 creatine and 25 g L−1 α-napthenol in 2N NaOH was pipetted into each assay well. Plates were incubated at 60 C for 15 min to facilitate color change. After incubation, 200 µl from each well were transferred to a microtiter plate. Absorbance at 535 nm was measured using a Tecan spectrophotometer. Absorbance measurements were corrected by subtracting the average absorbance values from the calculated adjustment factor. Enzyme activity was calculated as a percent of the absorbance of the nontreated paired controls. The experiment was repeated four times.
Net absorbance data were subjected to nonlinear regression using the best-fit model procedure as described above. Regression parameters were estimated using a three-parameter log-logistic equation:
where b is the relative slope of the curve at e, d is the upper asymptote, and e is the inflection point (Knezevic et al. 2007). For symmetric functions, e is equal to the EC50 value, the effective concentration of herbicide that inhibits enzyme activity by 50% relative to nontreated plants. Parameter estimates were compared among experiments, and if differences were not significant, data were pooled.
Molecular Basis of Resistance
DNA was extracted from 10 plants each of the R and S accessions (two to three node growth stage) using a DNA isolation kit (DNeasy Plant Mini Kit, Qiagen, Valencia, CA) and a modified protocol from Park et al. (2012). DNA samples were stored at −20 C until used for subsequent molecular analysis.
Polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification and automated sequencing of the PCR products were performed using a modified protocol by Patzoldt and Tranel (Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002). A smaller region of the ALS gene (Region B) was amplified where single point mutations conferring resistance to ALS inhibitors have been identified in giant ragweed and related species (Guttieri et al. Reference Guttieri, Eberlein, Mallory-Smith and Thill1996; Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002; Patzoldt et al. Reference Patzoldt, Tranel, Alexander and Schmitzer2001; Tranel et al. Reference Tranel, Jiang, Patzoldt and Wright2004; Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Patzoldt and Tranel2005). The forward and reverse primers used were 5′-ATGAACGTTCAAGAGTTAGC-3′ and 5′-CCTTCGGTGATCACATCCTTGAA-3′. The PCR reaction mix contained 40 ng DNA, 400 nM each of forward and reverse primers, 0.2 mM dNTP’s, 1.5 mM MgCl2, and 1 unit of Taq polymerase in 1× supplied buffer, in a final volume of 25 µl. The thermocycler protocol followed a 3 min incubation at 95 C followed by 35 cycles of 0.5 min at 95 C, 1 min at 50 C, 1 min at 72 C, and a 5 min extension at 72 C. PCR products were isolated by gel electrophoresis using a 1.2% TAE agarose gel containing 0.5 µg ml−1 ethidium bromide and visualized using an ultraviolet light. Prior to sequencing, PCR products were cleaned using ExoSAP-IT For PCR Product Cleanup (Affymetrix, USB, Santa Clara, CA) following the manufacturer’s instructions. The sequencing reaction was performed using ABI Prism Big Dye Terminator Kit and sequenced using an ABI 3730xl DNA Analyzer at the UW-Madison Biotechnology Center DNA Sequencing Facility. Sequence data were aligned and analyzed using Sequencher 5.3 software (Gene Codes, Ann Arbor, MI).
Competitive Growth and Fecundity
Seedlings were transplanted into 55 cm diameter (10 L) pots containing potting soil medium (as described above) after emergence of the first true leaves. Plants were grown under greenhouse conditions, watered, and fertilized as described above. Pots were rerandomized weekly to minimize the effects of microenvironmental variation in the greenhouse until 70 d after planting (DAP), at which time pollen shed began.
Replacement series experiments (Cousens Reference Cousens1991; Park et al. Reference Park, Benjamin and Watkinson2003) were conducted at one giant ragweed plant density (33 plants m−2) and five ratios of R to S plants (% R:% S, 0:100, 25:75, 50:50, 75:25, and 100:0; eight plants total per ratio). The experimental design was completely randomized, and each treatment was replicated three times. The total number of plants per experiment was 120. The experiment was repeated.
Nondestructive measurements of plant height and estimated leaf area were taken from 21 to 98 DAP, at which time plants were at or near maximum biomass and leaf area. Leaf area per plant was estimated from the length and width of each leaf according to the following equation:
where LA is the total leaf area per plant, L is the leaf length, W is the leaf width, and S is a species-specific coefficient that represents the proportional area of a rectangle occupied by a leaf (Moechnig et al. Reference Moechnig, Boerboom, Stoltenberg and Binning2003). The S coefficient used for giant ragweed was 0.52, as previously reported by Glettner and Stoltenberg (Reference Glettner and Stoltenberg2015). As plants matured, senescing biomass was collected, dried at 60 C to constant mass, and weighed. A subsample of plants from each experiment (n=24) were bagged (polypropylene pollination bags, 198 by 213 cm, Vilutis and Company, Frankfort, IL) for seed collection. At physiological maturity, seeds were harvested, and plant height was measured prior to cutting the shoot at the soil surface. Shoots were dried at 60 C to constant mass, and weighed. Shoot mass at physiological maturity was combined with dried senesced biomass to estimate total shoot dry mass at maximum vegetative growth. Seeds were collected from a subset of mature plants (n=24) from each experiment. Seed yield was determined as total g seed plant−1, number of seeds plant−1, and g seed−1. Seed viability was determined by categorizing a subsample of seeds (n=50) into categories described by Harrison et al. (Reference Harrison, Regnier, Schmoll and Webb2001): intact viable and intact nonviable (for both of which involucres contained fully formed seeds, with viability determined by tetrazolium assay) and empty involucre (no seed or not fully formed seed inside). The tetrazolium assay (Peters Reference Peters2000) was performed by imbibing unconditioned seeds for 18 h in distilled water, cutting seeds in half lengthwise, and soaking cut-side down in a 0.1% (v/v) aqueous solution of 2,3,5-triphenyl-tetrazolium chloride for 18 h at room temperature and examining for uniform staining (Glettner and Stoltenberg Reference Glettner and Stoltenberg2015).
The natural log of plant height and estimated leaf area was regressed over time and fit with a quadratic regression model with the use of the function ‘lm’ in R Statistical Language software (R Development Core Team 2014; R Foundation for Statistical Computing, Wien, Austria). Residuals were checked for normality and homogeneity of variance. A linear model was used to determine whether regression coefficients for either growth parameter differed between the R and S accessions at the 5% significance level.
Shoot dry mass data at estimated maximum plant biomass were analyzed using the ‘lm’ package in R. The de Wit method (De Wit and van den Bergh Reference De Wit and van den Bergh1965) was used to compare the proportional shoot dry mass of R and S accessions to theoretical mass under conditions of competitive equivalence. A 95% confidence interval was used to determine deviation from theoretical mass at each planting ratio. Seed yield and seed viability data demonstrated heterogeneous variances, and therefore these data were analyzed using a Welch’s t-test (P≤0.05).
Results and Discussion
Whole-Plant Dose Response
Dose–response model parameters did not differ across the four repeated experiments; therefore, data were pooled across the experiments for analysis. The best-fit model describing the S accession was a four-parameter log-logistic model. The ED50 estimate was 3.0 g ai ha−1 cloransulam for the S accession (Table 1). A response curve accurately describing an ED50 for the R accession could not be determined, as shoot mass of R plants treated with the maximum dose (1,765 g ai ha−1, 100 times the labeled rate) was reduced only by 40% relative to the nontreated control. Therefore, the ED50 was estimated to be greater than 1,765 g ai ha−1 (Table 1). Shoot mass did not differ between nontreated R and S; however, at discrete doses (1.765, 17.65, and 176.5 g ai ha−1) shoot mass differed between R and S accessions, indicating a differential response to cloransulam (Figure 1). The R accession was also tested for multiple resistance to glyphosate and was found to be sensitive (unpublished data).
a All treatments included 0.25% (v/v) nonionic surfactant and 2.25 kg ha−1 ammonium sulfate. Data from repeated experiments were pooled for analysis. Standard errors are shown in parentheses. Dose–response curves are shown in Figure 1.
b b, relative slope around e (ED50); c, lower asymptote; d, upper asymptote; ED50, effective dose of cloransulam that decreased shoot dry mass by 50% relative to nontreated control plants. A dash (—) indicates parameter value not estimated.
c Estimated value is greater than maximum dose (1,765 g ai ha−1) applied.
In Vivo ALS Activity
Regression model parameters for R and S accessions differed among four repeated bioassays, but parameters did not differ between each of the two sets of these bioassays. Therefore, data were pooled across each set of bioassays for analysis and referred to as Experiments 1 and 2. Differential ALS activity between R and S accessions in response to cloransulam was observed in both experiments (Figure 2). The effective concentrations of cloransulam that inhibited ALS activity 50% relative to nontreated plants (EC50) were 10.6- and 13.6-fold greater for R than S plants in Experiments 1 and 2, respectively (Table 2). This differential sensitivity of the ALS enzyme to cloransulam suggested that resistance is likely conferred by an altered target enzyme. These results do not exclude non-target-site-based resistance (NTSR); however, NTSR to ALS inhibitors has rarely been reported in broadleaf weeds (Délye Reference Délye2013).
a Standard errors are shown in parentheses. Dose–response curves are shown in Figure 2.
b b, relative slope around e (EC50); d, upper asymptote; EC50, effective concentration of cloransulam that decreased ALS activity by 50% relative to nontreated plants. Estimates followed by the same letter within a column and within an experiment do not differ at the 5% level of significance.
Molecular Basis of Resistance
A polymorphic region of the ALS gene was amplified based on prior research identifying this region as containing point mutations that confer resistance to ALS inhibitors (Tranel and Wright 2002; Tranel et al. Reference Tranel, Wright and Heap2015). Following sequence editing, a consensus sequence contained a total of 345 base pairs. Within the partial ALS sequence, six nucleotide substitutions (Table 3) were identified that resulted in two missense (Table 4) and four silent amino acid substitutions when translated.
a Polymorphisms are indicated by nucleotide position based on the Arabidopsis thaliana acetolactate synthase mRNA sequence retrieved from Genbank (gi|30693053|ref|NM_114714.2).
b K, R, and Y indicate heterozygous nucleotides G/T, A/G, and C/T, respectively.
c A dash (—) indicates identity with the consensus sequence.
a Polymorphisms are indicated by amino acid number based on the Arabidopsis thaliana ALS sequence (Sathasivan et al. 1990). Two amino acids indicate that the ALS nucleotide sequence was heterozygous within the associated codon.
A substitution of a G to T nucleotide conferred a tryptophan-to-leucine substitution at the 574 position relative to an Arabidopsis thaliana reference sequence (Table 4). All R plants tested were heterozygous for the amino acid substitution, in which one allele retained the G nucleotide, and one allele contained the T mutation. The tryptophan-to-leucine substitution (W574L) was associated with the R accession, and we therefore identified this substitution as the molecular basis of resistance to cloransulam. A W574L substitution has been documented in several broadleaf and grass weed species (McCullough et al. Reference McCullough, McElroy, Yu, Zhang, Miller, Chen, Johnston and Czarnota2016; McElroy et al. Reference McElroy, Flessner, Wang, Dane, Walker and Wehtje2013; Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002; Powles and Yu Reference Powles and Yu2010; Tranel and Wright 2002; Yu et al. 2008). It is the second most common of eight amino acid substitutions identified as conferring resistance to one or more ALS-inhibiting herbicide families (Tranel et al. Reference Tranel, Wright and Heap2015) following a proline substitution at the 197 position. A W574L mutation is the only confirmed substitution conferring resistance to ALS inhibitors in either common ragweed (Ambrosia artemisiifolia L.) or giant ragweed (Tranel et al. Reference Tranel, Wright and Heap2015). In common ragweed, a W574L substitution confers a high level of resistance to both triazolopyrimidine and imidazolinone herbicides (Patzoldt et al. Reference Patzoldt, Tranel, Alexander and Schmitzer2001; Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Patzoldt and Tranel2005). In giant ragweed, however, there is limited ALS sequence information. Patzoldt and Tranel (Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002) found that a W574L substitution conferred resistance to triazolopyrimidine, imidazolinone, and sulfonylurea herbicides in a population of giant ragweed from Indiana; however, ALS sensitivity was not assessed quantitatively. In both ragweed species, heterozygosity and homozygosity of the Leu574 substitution has been documented (Patzoldt and Tranel Reference Patzoldt and Tranel2002; Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Patzoldt and Tranel2005). Zheng et al. (Reference Zheng, Patzoldt and Tranel2005) concluded that the Leu574 allele acted as a dominant allele conferring ALS inhibitor resistance in common ragweed, such that only one allele is necessary to confer resistance. These results suggest that the Leu574 similarly acts as a dominant allele in giant ragweed.
A second missense mutation resulted in a tryptophan-to-cysteine amino acid substitution at the 579 position (Y579C) relative to an Arabidopsis thaliana reference sequence (Table 4). The Cys579 substitution was not unique to the R accession, and therefore did not likely confer resistance to cloransulam. However, all R plants tested exhibited an allele for the Y579C substitution, whereas this allele was found in three out of 10 S plants (S-13, S-17, and S-19 in Table 4). Patzoldt et al. (Reference Patzoldt, Tranel, Alexander and Schmitzer2001) previously identified the Y579C substitution in a population of ALS-resistant giant ragweed; however, the substitution was not associated with the R phenotype. This study concludes that the R accession was highly resistant to cloransulam and that resistance was conferred by a W574L amino acid substitution.
Vegetative Growth and Development
The experiment by treatment interaction for plant height over time was not significant (unpublished data); therefore, data from repeated experiments were pooled for analysis. Plant height during the vegetative phase (21 to 98 DAP) did not differ between the R and S accessions (Figure 3A). The experiment by treatment interaction for plant leaf area was significant (unpublished data); therefore, data were analyzed separately for each experiment. Similar to plant height, leaf area did not differ between the R and S accessions over time (21 to 80 DAP) (Figure 3B,C).
In mixed ratios of R to S plants (% R:% S, 25:75, 50:50, 75:25) the treatment by accession interaction for shoot dry biomass was not significant (P=0.69), inferring no competitive interaction between the R and S accessions. At each ratio of R to S plants, the proportional shoot dry mass of either accession did not differ from theoretical proportions representing competitive equivalence, indicating no difference in competitive ability (Figure 4).
Previous research has not determined the effects of ALS inhibitor resistance on giant ragweed growth and development. In other species, resistance to ALS inhibitors has been associated with variable effects on plant growth and development. In ALS inhibitor–resistant Powell amaranth, Tardif et al. (Reference Tardif, Rajcan and Costea2006) found that a W574L substitution was associated with detrimental effects on plant growth, including slower development and reduced biomass production. They found that sensitive plants consistently outperformed resistant plants when grown under competitive conditions. However, the W574L substitution has not been associated with apparent differences in growth and development in other species. Yu et al. (Reference Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2010) identified a biotype of rigid ryegrass (Lolium rigidum Gaudin) with no difference in growth compared with sensitive biotypes. Similarly, Légère et al. (Reference Légère, Stevenson, Beckie, Warwick, Johnson, Hrynewich and Lozinski2013) found no evidence of differential growth between ALS inhibitor–resistant and ALS inhibitor–sensitive biotypes of kochia [Kochia scoparia (L.) Schrad]. Although Li et al. (Reference Li, Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2013) found that the W574L substitution decreased ALS activity in ALS inhibitor–resistant wild radish (Raphanus raphanistrum L.), plant growth was not affected. Other common mutations conferring resistance to ALS inhibitors have been associated with both decreased and increased ALS activity compared with sensitive wild types; however, effects on plant growth were variable or not apparent (Li et al. Reference Li, Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2013; Vila-Aiub et al. Reference Vila-Aiub, Neve and Powles2009; Yu et al. Reference Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2010).
Fecundity and Seed Viability
The experiment by treatment interaction was not significant for fecundity or seed viability (unpublished data); therefore, data from repeated experiments were pooled for analysis. Each of the metrics of fecundity (total g seed plant−1, number of seeds plant−1, and g seed−1) and seed viability (percent intact viable, intact nonviable, and empty involucre) did not differ between R and S accessions (Table 5). These results suggest that the W574L resistance trait is not associated with any apparent detrimental effects on seed quantity or quality of the R accession.
a Data from repeated experiments were pooled for analysis. Standard error of the mean is shown in parentheses. Means followed by the same letter within a column do not differ at the 5% level of significance as determined by a Welch’s t-test.
b Intact viable and nonviable involucres contained fully formed seeds with viability of embryo determined by tetrazolium assay; nonintact, no seed, or incompletely formed seed.
Tardif et al. (Reference Tardif, Rajcan and Costea2006) reported markedly decreased seed production in an ALS inhibitor–resistant biotype of Powell amaranth compared with a sensitive biotype when grown in either competitive or noncompetitive conditions. In contrast, Cross et al. (Reference Cross, McCarty, McElroy, Tharavil and Bridges2015) found that ALS inhibitor resistance in annual bluegrass was associated with greater inflorescence and seed production compared with S plants. These results and those of previous research suggest that target-site alterations conferring ALS resistance can affect ALS activity and have pleiotropic effects on plant fitness (Li et al. Reference Li, Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2013; Vila-Aiub et al. Reference Vila-Aiub, Neve and Powles2009; Yu et al. Reference Yu, Han, Vila-Aiub and Powles2010); however, they also suggest that the effects on plant growth and reproduction are inconsistent among species and may be subtle or not apparent.
The life history traits and demography of giant ragweed promote the spread of a resistance trait, particularly if the trait is not associated with a fitness cost. In outcrossing species like giant ragweed, nuclear-inherited dominant traits such as the W574L substitution (Zheng et al. Reference Zheng, Patzoldt and Tranel2005) have the potential to spread rapidly (Maxwell et al. Reference Maxwell, Roush and Radesevich1990). Heritability of the resistance trait and success of offspring were not investigated in this study. If heritability of the trait and offspring survival are not affected by the resistance trait, these findings would suggest that the frequency of the resistance trait will be maintained even in the absence of selection pressure by a herbicide (Jasieniuk and Maxwell Reference Jasieniuk and Maxwell1994). Further contributing to the maintenance of a resistance trait is the broad abundance of giant ragweed across the landscape (Regnier et al. Reference Regnier, Harrison, Loux, Holloman, Venkatesh, Diekmann, Taylor, Ford, Stoltenberg, Hartzler, Davis, Schutte, Cardina, Mahoney and Johnson2016) and its continuance in the soil seedbank (Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Regnier, Schmoll and Harrison2007). Seed dormancy beyond a growing season facilitates gene flow among multiple generations (Hartnett et al. Reference Hartnett, Hartnett and Bazzaz1987), leading to persistence of a resistance trait.
The rate of spread of a resistance trait may also be affected by the dominance level of fitness costs. Previous research has shown that fitness costs associated with herbicide resistance may differ between heterozygous and homozygous resistant plants, depending on the dominance level of fitness costs, which can be recessive, underdominant, or dominant (Roux et al. Reference Roux, Gasquez and Reboud2004). In mutant lines of Arabidopsis thaliana resistant to the ALS inhibitor chlorsulfuron, Roux et al. found that the dominance level of fitness costs was recessive, suggesting that the spread of resistance alleles for chlorsulfuron would spread faster under agronomic conditions compared with resistance alleles with dominant or underdominant fitness costs, which the authors found in lines resistant to the synthetic auxin herbicide 2,4-D. As noted above, plants in our competitive growth and fecundity experiments were grown from seeds collected from R or S plants that had been grown in separate groups, respectively, in isolated greenhouses. Consequently, R plants in our experiments could have been either heterozygous or homozygous for the cloransulam resistance allele. If the dominance level of potential fitness costs associated with cloransulam resistance was recessive, it would facilitate rapid spread of the resistance allele in a predominantly outcrossing species such as giant ragweed.
The interaction of life cycle characteristics and selection pressures, including management, will ultimately determine the persistence of resistance traits within a population. A survey of the occurrence and distribution of glyphosate- and/or cloransulam-methyl–resistant giant ragweed in Ontario, Canada, demonstrated a rapid increase in the occurrence and geographical distribution of resistant biotypes over a period of just 3 yr (Follings et al. Reference Follings, Soltani, Robinson, Tardif, Lawton and Sikkema2013). This instance should be interpreted as a cautionary tale of the potential spread of resistance traits when conditions are favorable. Given the life history traits of giant ragweed favoring persistence in the soil seedbank for periods of several years (Harrison et al. Reference Harrison, Regnier, Schmoll and Harrison2007), tactics aimed at managing giant ragweed resistance to ALS inhibitors should be implemented prior to its evolution, since once established there are no apparent biological selective forces to decrease its proportion in the population.
Acknowledgments
The authors would like to thank the students who assisted us in this project: Rachel Bouressa, Cole Cook, Mariana Debernardini, Courtney Glettner, and Joseph Zimbric.